The Tribeca Film Festival experience is now exclusively available in homes across the UK through Tribeca Film, the distribution label of Tribeca Enterprises, which today announced its expansion to the UK and the first six films which it will distribute across multiple platforms in the region.

From April 16th, for an eight week run, UK audiences will be given direct access to watch select Festival titles on demand, both at home and on the go. The films will be available on demand in the UK via pay-per-view with Virgin Media, as well as select digital platforms including iTunes, PlayStation, and Xbox.

Mario Lopez was kissing women left and right last night ... but they weren't wife and baby mama Courtney Mazza!The "Extra" host was photographed getting hot and heavy with both "Real Housewives of Beverly Hills" star Adrienne Maloof and singer Meital Dohan last night in L.A.But it was all for a good cause!The former "Saved by the Bell" star put his lips up for auction as part of a Have a Heart benefit for organ donor recipients.Meital reportedly dropped $5,000 for her kiss ... but that's nothing compared to Adrienne's bid. The reality star, who is currently dating Sean Stewart, apparently donated $25,000!Looking at the photo above, it looks like Maloof's kiss was open-mouth. Guess that's what another $20,000 gets you!And don't worry, Mario's wife signed off on the event -- she was right by his side for the bash! Read more

Even the most diehard indie music fans need to trade their flannels in for some glitz and glam. If wearing “glitter” is taking it too far than at least consider sprinkling it over your soul-searching playlists. Everyone needs to dance once in a while. So, hit that “virgin” territory with Meital Dohan’s song, “On Ya” (feat. Sean Kingston). Directed by RayKay (Britney Spears “Till The World Ends” / Lady Gaga “Pokerface”), the “On Ya” music video has garnered 2.5 million views and features a bedazzled Meital Dohan alongside rapper, Sean Kingston. Skydiving in a revealing gold attire, Dohan immediately showcases the alluring unpredictable characteristics of a pop princess. You think [ Read More ]

The post Meital Dohan Is Set For Pop Domination appeared first on Shockya.com.

Meital Dohan is on her way back to "Weeds." The Israeli actress is returning to the Showtime series as Yael Hoffman, Andy Botwin's (Justin Kirk) former love interest and the head of a rabbinical school.

On Sunday, Israeli-born Meital Dohan returns on the 100th episode of Showtime’s Weeds for the first time since 2006 as Yael Hoffman, the head of a rabbinical school who is pursued by Andy Botwin, with whom she shared a controversial scene six years ago that involved her use of a strap-on in a sex scene. Photos: Behind the Scenes: Weeds Now in the second to last episode of the long-running series, her character will return, and according to a teaser for the show, Yael will not even remember being with Andy, who is played by Justin Kirk.

Chicago – With so many unfaithful weiners crowding the daily news cycle, I suppose it’s as appropriate a time as any for a film like Dana Adam Shapiro’s “Monogamy.” As in the over-publicized Anthony Weiner case, the infidelity in Shapiro’s film never actually takes place. Instead of physical contact, the affair takes place entirely within the obsessive mind of a sexually frustrated voyeur.

Unfortunately, the voyeur is played by Chris Messina, a good actor who seems oddly incapable of garnering audience empathy. Every time his face shows up on the screen, I’m suddenly filled with the intense desire to punch it. Perhaps my reaction is simply due to the fact that Messina has delivered multiple memorable portrayals of oafish, self-absorbed masculinity. He played the allegedly lovable boyfriend in “Julie & Julia,” who devoured his wife’s carefully prepared dishes with all the etiquette of a slovenly swine.

At first glance you could see a movie about a photographer who takes clandestine pictures of clients who pay to be shot in the wild, an odd subset of humans who need to see what it’s like to be shown in their natural territory, as something Hitchcock would cook up when one of the clients takes it up a notch and gets a little freaky deekey, having a penchant for voyeurism.

Purposely antagonizing the guy, the sexualized client and photog share in a relationship that isn’t so much physical as it is cerebral. As, you see, the guy is getting married to Rashida Jones, a woman

U.S. audiences may remember Israeli actress Meital Dohan (pronounced "Mey-tall") from her turn on Showtime's "Weeds," and sharing the screen with Rashida Jones in the critically acclaimed "Monogamy." Already the author of several books and plays, Meital is now trying her hand at the music scene.

Zap2it has your first look at her debut single, "Yummy Boyz." There's not much we can say about the video except that if you're anything like us, you'll watch it with your head cocked to the side and a puzzled expression on your face.

"Making the video was a bigger than life experience and even better than drugs," Meital says.

"Obama was great on the shoot. He came on time and he behaved properly," she adds with a sly grin. "I was really surprised and pleased that the President of the United States wanted to be in my video."

In the movie, Messina plays wedding photographer Theo, who lives a comfortable life in Brooklyn with his budding musician fiancee Nat (Jones). Thoroughly bored with his day job and increasingly anxious about his upcoming wedding, Theo embarks upon a risky and adventurous side project: He’s hired by clients to clandestinely snap voyeuristic photos as they go about their days. Things go smoothly until a sexy new customer’s (Meital Dohan, TV’s Weeds) very public exhibitionism sparks an obsession in Theo. As he captures her day and night, the woman’s mysterious trysts and illicit behavior send him reeling, forcing him to

The drama Monogamy is a very real portrayal of a relationship on the brink, as it is faces the fear of commitment and the fantasy that reality can never live up to. Bored with his job as a wedding photographer, Theo (Chris Messina) forms a company where he is hired by clients to clandestinely snap voyeuristic photos of them, as they go about their daily lives. When a sexy exhibitionist (Meital Dohan) hires him, he quickly becomes obsessed with her, stalking her day and night, which threatens his relationship and impending marriage to Nat (Rashida Jones). As Theo is consumed with thoughts about his client, the couple are forced to face truths about their own issues and sex life at home. At the film’s press day, actress Rashida Jones did this exclusive interview with Collider and talked about the attraction of playing such a challenging role, the importance of

Increasingly anxious about his impending marriage to Nat (Rashida Jones) and thoroughly bored with his day job as a wedding photographer, Theo (Chris Messina) establishes a hobby: he's hired by clients to clandestinely snap voyeuristic photos of them as they go about their days. Things go smoothly until a sexy exhibitionist (Meital Dohan

In Monogamy, Chris Messina plays Theo, a burnt out wedding photographer who starts a side job that involves photographing clients in a more natural, unaware surrounding. When one of his clients with the provocative handle "Subgirl" (Meital Dohan) shows up for her session and puts on quite a show, it leads Theo down a road of obsession that puts a strain on his current engagement to Nat (Rashida Jones). Movieline sat down with Messina to discuss the dark twists of Monogamy, an audition outburst that led to him being banned for life from the future work of The Sopranos' David Chase, and why it was unfair that Devil got caught up in the stink left over from M. Night Shyamalan's The Last Airbender.

Dana Adam Shapiro's Tff '10 alum pins an elusive seductress against a relationship on the brink. Catch it on VOD tomorrow and in theaters March 11! After winning the Tff 2010 award for Best NY Narrative feature, Dana Adam Shapiro's (Oscar-nommed Murderball) Brooklyn-based drama returns home for another run. Tribeca Film Festival programmer Roya Rastegar on Monogamy: Thirtysomethings Theo (Chris Messina) and Nat (Rashida Jones) are engaged to be married. They live what seems to be on all counts a comfortable life of love, music, and laughter in their cozy Brooklyn apartment. But Theo is bored with his job as a wedding photographer - the generic backgrounds, the artificial posing, the stilted newlyweds - so he develops the unconventional side business "Gumshoot," a service where clients hire him to secretly stalk them with his camera. When he is called out on a job to snap pics of an exhibitionist

The narrative feature debut from Murderball co-director Dana Adam Shapiro, Monogamy was well received when it premiered at the 2010 Tribeca Film Festival and even better received at the 2011 Independent Spirit Awards, where it's garnered a nod [1] for Best First Screenplay. The film follows a bored Brooklyn-based photographer (Chris Messina) who, amidst doubts about getting married to his fiancée (Rashida Jones), develops an unconventional side business where clients hire him to stalk them with his camera. It's described as [2] marrying "a mystery-thriller with a slice-of-life relationship drama to present a marvelously observed portrait of masculinity in crisis in the face of its own fantasies and fears of commitment". Check out the trailer after the break. I've been wondering when we'd see Chris Messina get a challenging lead role, and this looks like it may be it. The guy has great screen presence, and as affable as he is playing the 'nice

Synopsis: Increasingly anxious about his impending marriage to Nat (Jones) and thoroughly bored with his day job as a wedding photographer, Theo (Messina) establishes a hobby: he’s hired by clients to clandestinely snap voyeuristic photos of them as they go about their days. Things go smoothly until a sexy new customer’s exhibitionism leads to an all-consuming obsession. As Theo shoots her day and night, the woman’s mysterious public trysts send him reeling, forcing him to confront uncomfortable truths about his sex life at home.

The film selection at the Tribeca Film Festival tends to be pretty hit-or-miss, but one of the movies from last year that I really enjoyed was Monogamy, the narrative feature debut from Murderball documentarian Dana Adam Shapiro, and starring Chris Messina in a role that really gets away from his cuddly good-guy parts in Six Feet Under and Julie & Julia. He stars as a Brooklyn-based photographer who becomes obsessed with a mysterious, exhibitionist blonde (Meital Dohan) after receiving a mysterious work assignment; all the while he's growing distant from his fiancee (Rashida Jones) and having doubts about this entire commitment to marriage. The film isn't perfect but definitely interesting, well-photographed and well-acted-- and if you're a resident of modern, wealthy Brooklyn, kind of interesting as a hometown effort. Oscilloscope picked up Monogamy at Tribeca last year and will release the film starting March 11. Check out the trailer below or in

Increasingly anxious about his impending marriage to Nat (Jones) and thoroughly bored with his day job as a wedding photographer, Theo (Messina) establishes a hobby: he’s hired by clients to clandestinely snap voyeuristic photos of them as they go about their days. Things go smoothly until a sexy new customer’s exhibitionism leads to an all-consuming obsession. As Theo shoots her day and night, the woman’s mysterious public trysts send him reeling, forcing him to confront uncomfortable truths about his sex life at home.

Monogamy is not a romantic comedy. Given its title (and the fact that it stars Rashida Jones and Chris Messina), it sounds like the natural setup for something cute and light. But the film is not only dark, it's creepy. Messina stars as Theo, a wedding photographer planning for his nuptials to his fiancée Nat (Rashida Jones). Theo's life is pretty run-of-the-mill until he starts mixing up his photography work. Clients hire him to candidly capture their everyday routines (think of it as a personal paparazzo); but when he becomes infatuated with a particular customer (Meital Dohan), Theo spirals into a new sexual obsession. This isn't the first Hollywood drama to address cheating or temptation, but the story's voyeurism aspect adds a new spin on the all too common theme. Even though Theo isn't actively engaging in sex with his mysterious client, can his consuming desire for her be considered infidelity?

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